Showing posts with label heron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heron. Show all posts

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Big Bird on the Roof

The other night, I ran into a neighbor who related that a mutual friend and neighbor of ours, Rooty-Tooty, along with her husband, Mr. Fix-it, had spotted a peacock on her roof. I replied, "And had she been having a cocktail?" "No," said JanenJim, "She insists she had not!"

I'll let our friend Rooty-Tooty tell the tale:

TS, now we both can claim feathered aviators resting atop our rooftops! Mine is about the size of yours, a tad smaller, legs not as long as your heron, and definitely not in search of fish food. Ours is a female peacock.

Two young men came walking up the driveway yesterday, one with a very large net in his hand, and asked if they could go through our backyard gate to look for a bird in the wooded area behind us. They had gotten a lead from someone in the neighborhood that a peacock was hanging around back there. (A neighbor had told us that a pheasant had been in our yard while we were at the lake.) He was about to give Mr. Fix-it a business card, when he turned around and spotted his prey on our garage roof.

Muffin the chow dog, our backyard boarder, had spotted her also. She barked and held Miss Peacock's attention while one of the young men went up on the roof with the net. The other young man on the ground whistled pleasant notes of distraction also. Ray and I just watched in amazement at the goings-on. The roof man tiptoed over the rooftop and trapped Miss Peacock with one slam of the net (he had obviously done this before). He carried her upside down by her feet, and when he released her from the net, you could appreciate the size of her.

Miss Peacock comes from a nearby neighborhood, where she lives in a large yard with donkeys, goats, etc. She had escaped from her pen a week ago, and she's been enjoying our neighborhood and her apparent freedom. Several people have seen her and thought she was a pheasant, because she has none of the beautiful colors of the male peacock. The two young men are caretakers/yardmen for the owners of this menagerie of animals.

I'm glad I have pictures to send you so you can see that it was not the martini's verbalizing a one up-manship on your Heron!

Feathered friends sticking together!


Well, Rooty-Tooty, I think we've both been outdone by Bill Rattray of Buckley, Washington:

Bill Rattray has a pet he never wanted. But it seems the pet has found an owner it wants.

"And I look out the window and it was an emu sitting in my backyard," said Rattray. "It's kind of the oddest thing to happen. I was thinking, 'They don't fly or nothing so how did it get in my backyard?'"

Rattray closed his yard gate and called animal control. But he was told animal control officers don't deal with emus.

Rattray is now trying to find out whether the bird had a previous owner. If so, he says, he'd love to reconnect the bird with its rightful owner.

"Obviously, if you're missing an emu, you're going to know it's missing," he said.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Gator Head

It's great to be back on the blog! My business has been thriving the last few months, which is wonderful, but that means that I've been more or less connected to my Macbook 7 days a week, and my left index finger and my right thumb started to complain a couple of weeks ago. As I chose my keyboarding carefully, the blog had to go for a while, but I am blessed with work!

When we last left the koi pond, a large bird was threatening the fish population. A new casualty turned up almost every day for a week, culminating in the discovery of one of our 9-year-old koi floating one morning. We had not yet run out of ideas to combat the great blue heron, however, and our latest weapon in the arsenal was on its way.

Last weekend, when we were in the midst of a visit with Pappy, Mommadrool, The Fred and StickiBunScotti, a box arrived at our front door. As DH and I played with the kids and Mommadrool showed us Zoo Boo photos, Pappy announced, "I want to unpack the Gator Head."

Three generations of men excitedly assembled the floating decoy, which has glaring eyes that will--we hope--follow our friend the heron until he, being easily spooked, flaps his magnificent wings and leaves the premises.

Gator Head was a big hit with SBS, who pointed at the new addition to the pond and babbled enthusiastically in complete sentences of some description.

We're not sure if this latest measure will help. Actually, I haven't seen the bird in the last couple of weeks, but winter is his big season around here, and we don't want to lose any more fish and hope Gator Head will do the trick.

Pappy added helpfully, "It'll probably scare the fish."